Brewing Instructions

Would never buy my tea from any one else English Breakfast blend (No.10 blend) is our favourite we just love it

Margaret Leeder21/08/2016, 04:00 PM

No day can be started properly without Drury English No.10 Blend tea.

E Brown23/07/2016, 10:00 AM

It is the only balanced 'clean' tea

Tennant Bucklebury 24/06/2015, 10:05 AM

We alternate between this blend and Kenyan Fine Leaf Fannings. If you like this blend, give the Kenyan a try.

GreenMac42 from Canterbury, Kent01/06/2011, 12:00 AM

A group of us really love this tea. We need a 'mule' to bring massive amounts to us here in the States. Thank goodness for friends in the UK.

John L. Mortensen from Florida01/06/2011, 12:00 AM

No.10 breakfast tea is now my favourite start to the day. I like my tea strong and this does it for me. I'll move onto coffee later in the day but it just has to be this tea to bring true joy in the first cuppa.

E Brown from Norfolk01/12/2010, 12:00 AM

We've been buying English Breakfast Blend from Drury for a few years now and it is consistently our favourite tea - the one we drink in bed every morning. A little goes a long way - one rounded teaspoon will make a brew enough for four cups. We always make it in a John Lewis medium size stainless steel pot with a mesh filter which fits inside the lid.
Highly recommended!

Brewing the perfect cup

Fill your kettle with fresh cold water
Never from the hot tap or pre-boiled water.

Bring the kettle to the boil.
Off the boil for green / white & herbal infusions

Warm the tea pot before brewing.
Extraction of flavour from the tea leaves becomes more rapid when a good constant temperature is maintained.

Use fresh good quality loose leaf teas.
Tea bags can also be used in a pot.
You can use finely cut leaf blended teas or for the more adventurous a larger leaf speciality tea for a more unique subtle flavour.

Allow tea to brew for 3-5 Minutes.
Brewing time changes depending on leaf size and type of tea being brewed. 3–5 Minutes is optimal for most teas (2-3 Minutes for most green teas). Over this time and Tannins will be released giving your brew and bitter flavour.

Stir the tea in the pot once or twice while it is brewing.
You can produce a superior flavour even by using tea bags in a pot. A 2–3 cup size tea bag would be the best to use for a small pot. Brewing time then would be recommended to 3–5 Minutes.
It is recommended to have a tea pot that uses an internal strainer. In this way you can remove the leaves easily from the tea from your brew to stop stewing.

Green Tea (Unfermented)

As soon as the leaves have been plucked, they are laid out to dry and then heat treated to halt fermentation. In some cases the leaves are steamed to prevent the fermentation process. The teas may then be rolled and broken to produce various leaf sizes. Green teas should never be drunk with milk.

Oolong Tea (Semi-fermented)
These teas are allowed to ferment for a specified period of time (which differs for China and Formosan teas) before the process is halted. Oolong teas are always whole leaves and again, should not be drunk
with milk.

Black Tea (fermented)
The most popular method of manufacture, black teas are allowed to fully ferment to produce the strongest flavour and colour. The leaf sizes are usually graded as follows:

Orange Pekoe and Flowery Orange Pekoe (OP & FOP)
The largest leaf size of black teas, made from the end bud and first leaf of each shoot. These teas have the lightest and most delicate flavour of black teas.